Enough with the games, it is time to call in the police to investigate the allegations of interference and obstruction of justice facing the Prime Minister’s Office.

If you’ve been living under a rock, The Globe and Mail revealed last week that officials in Justin Trudeau’s office allegedly pressured then-attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould to go light on construction and engineering giant SNC-Lavalin.

The company is facing prosecution in Canada on corruption charges related to allegations of bribery and fraud in Libya, a violation of Canadian law. The allegation against Trudeau’s PMO is that they pressured her to force the director of the Public Prosecution Service of Canada to sign a remediation agreement and help the firm avoid jail time.

Essentially the PMO is accused of trying to get a good friend off on a corruption charge by interfering with the prosecution.

“When I was prosecuting cases, if a politician had ever called me up, I would have put down the phone and called the police,” former attorney general and Crown prosecutor Peter MacKay told me on Sunday.

“I think the police should be looking at this as soon as possible,” MacKay said.

Lest you think that MacKay is being partisan by saying this deserves a look at by the police, the former Harper cabinet minister isn’t alone in thinking this crosses the line.

“A lot of police officers have laid a lot of obstruction of justice charges on a lot of ordinary Canadians, with a lot less evidence than this,” former Ontario attorney general Michael Bryant said last week.

Bryant is a Liberal who served under Dalton McGuinty, the same premier two of Trudeau’s closest advisors — Gerry Butts and Katie Telford — served under.

Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond, a retired judge turned law professor, also says the RCMP need to be called in.

The Conservatives and NDP have banded together to get to the bottom of this issue and called for an emergency committee meeting this week.

When asked about the allegations directly last Thursday, Trudeau said he didn’t “direct” Wilson-Raybould, but that isn’t the allegation. The story said she was pressured to effectively drop the charges against a Liberal-friendly firm.

Over the last few days, the Liberals have been spending plenty of time talking to the media, anonymously, to admit that conversations with Wilson-Raybould happened but claim it was all above board — trust us.

So, now we know that the original reports that conversations occurred are accurate but we should just take the word of anonymous government sources that it was all within the rules.

Of course, these are the same Liberals who want to dismiss the allegations against them as being untrustworthy because they’re based on anonymous sources.

Some of these anonymous government sources have told the Liberal-friendly Toronto Star that the governing party won’t agree to Opposition demands for that emergency meeting.

Nor will they waive her claim of solicitor-client privilege.

Some legal experts, including previous attorneys general, don’t believe that Wilson-Raybould is bound by privilege in this case. The attorney general is not the lawyer for the PMO and in criminal prosecutions represents the Crown, not the government.

MacKay is in that camp, saying Wilson-Raybould can speak without breaking privilege because neither Trudeau nor his office were her clients while she was leading the prosecution.

“This is a far more serious matter than having Parliament engage in a partisan examination of the subject matter,” MacKay said, reiterating his call for the police to come in.

The man who spent four years as a prosecutor and 18 as an MP, including at the highest levels of government and cabinet, calls the situation that we are in “uncharted waters.”